Mohamud Daya, M.D., M.S.

Dr. Daya joined the Department of Emergency Medicine at OHSU in 1988 and
currently serves as our EMS Section Director. Dr. Daya also serves as the
EMS Medical Director for Tualatin Valley Fire & Rescue and Forest Grove
Fire & Rescue as well as the Medical Director of Washington County
Consolidated Communications Agency. His professional interests include
cardiac arrest, emergency medical services systems, international emergency
medicine, and time-critical emergencies: AMI, stroke, trauma, travel
medicine and occupational infectious diseases. In his free times he enjoys
traveling, reading, playing squash and listening to music.

Education

MD Degree:

University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada 1984

Residency:

Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, OR 1987

Fellowship:

Emergency Medicine, Oregon Health Sciences University, 1988

Awards and Recognition

2017

Ranked 55th in NIH funding for principal investigators in Emergency Medicine research

2015

Ranked 49th in NIH funding for principal investigators in Emergency Medicine research

2015

Named one of Portland's 2015 Top Doctors in Emergency Medicine - Portland Monthly Magazine

2014

Named one of Portland's 2014 Top Doctors in Emergency Medicine - Portland Monthly Magazine

2013

Named one of Portland's 2013 Top Doctors in Emergency Medicine - Portland Monthly Magazine

Craig Warden, M.D., M.P.H., G.I.S., M.S.

Dr. Warden joined the Department of Emergency Medicine in 1996. He currently serves as the
Medical Director of the Global Mission
Readiness in Clackamas, the Oregon State Urban Search & Rescue Task Force 1 (OR TF-1),
Clackamas County (CCOM) Emergency Medical Dispatch and Clackamas County Emergency Medical
Services Advisory Council. Dr. Warden is an accomplished author, educator, former paramedic
and innovator. Because of Dr Warden's leadership, the paramedics and EMT's with Clackamas
Fire District #1 have embraced participation in a national study on cardiac resuscitation,
resulting in some of the highest cardiac arrest "save to alive" at discharge percentages
in the country. He also implemented the use of a rescue airway as an option for paramedics
to secure an airway while performing CPR, now being considered as the standard for Cardiac
Arrest care in the Portland Metropolitan area.